We were talking about never lying; I copied a quotation from Constant’s critique of Kant (they were explicitly discussing a version of the “Tell-the-Murderer” thought experiment) and then summarized Kant’s negative response to Constant.
I’m not really sure why one wouldn’t bring it up? We had two different conceptions of why you shouldn’t lie in the main post. Eliezer’s sounded a lot like Kant’s, but then he said that you don’t have to include everyone in the group of people you would never lie to. Kant specifically addresses this argument.
Next step....
Bring up Kant.
I would probably just add a comment that you disagree with Kant’s assumptions to the chain and go on to state that this makes his argument of no use to us in the modern day and age.
I threw in the point that you could reconstruct his arguments as utilitarian critiques in the hope that someone might not just discount Kant and be done with it...c’est la vie.
I didn’t intend to imply that you yourself believe in Kant. Sorry.
As for why one shouldn’t bring him up, it’s because it might prime others in the argument to treat the original variants as similar or equivalent to Kant’s position. I think this could be a common problem, and I felt others should be more aware of it.
I was just a little put off that you used me as an example of pulling Kant in when he doesn’t apply: I took some care to keep Kant within Kant’s domain and ask for specifics about how EY’s OB position differed.
Most of your post is dedicated to refuting Kant’s assumptions… that would have answer part of my questions in the other post … but does it necessarily follow that he is pulled in to make one’s opponents into straw men?
The discussion could have used some Kant and I am really do not agree that he does not apply.
In regard to why one shouldn’t bring him up, you seem to suggest that Plato really was right after all:
“Shall we, then, thus lightly suffer our children to listen to any chance stories fashioned by any chance teachers and so to take into their minds opinions for the most part contrary to those that we shall think it desirable for them to hold when they are grown up?” “By no manner of means will we allow it.” “We must begin, then, it seems, by a censorship [377c] over our storymakers, and what they do well we must pass and what not, reject. And the stories on the accepted list we will induce nurses and mothers to tell to the children and so shape their souls by these stories far rather than their bodies by their hands. But most of the stories they now tell we must reject.”
Who are we protecting at LW? I think everyone here can tell the difference between EY, The Black Belt Bayesian and Kant on most issues, but from time to time I like a little clarification.
Did anyone say that they believed in Kant?
Actual comment thread (with context intact!): (http://lesswrong.com/lw/6w/degrees_of_radical_honesty/4jn?context=1#4jn)
We were talking about never lying; I copied a quotation from Constant’s critique of Kant (they were explicitly discussing a version of the “Tell-the-Murderer” thought experiment) and then summarized Kant’s negative response to Constant.
I’m not really sure why one wouldn’t bring it up? We had two different conceptions of why you shouldn’t lie in the main post. Eliezer’s sounded a lot like Kant’s, but then he said that you don’t have to include everyone in the group of people you would never lie to. Kant specifically addresses this argument.
Next step....
Bring up Kant.
I would probably just add a comment that you disagree with Kant’s assumptions to the chain and go on to state that this makes his argument of no use to us in the modern day and age.
I threw in the point that you could reconstruct his arguments as utilitarian critiques in the hope that someone might not just discount Kant and be done with it...c’est la vie.
For interested partires, there’s plenty more out there (http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/lying-definition/), but Kant is still relevant.
I didn’t intend to imply that you yourself believe in Kant. Sorry.
As for why one shouldn’t bring him up, it’s because it might prime others in the argument to treat the original variants as similar or equivalent to Kant’s position. I think this could be a common problem, and I felt others should be more aware of it.
I don’t discount Kant completely. The Kant-Laplace hypothesis is probably correct.
I was just a little put off that you used me as an example of pulling Kant in when he doesn’t apply: I took some care to keep Kant within Kant’s domain and ask for specifics about how EY’s OB position differed.
Most of your post is dedicated to refuting Kant’s assumptions… that would have answer part of my questions in the other post … but does it necessarily follow that he is pulled in to make one’s opponents into straw men?
The discussion could have used some Kant and I am really do not agree that he does not apply.
In regard to why one shouldn’t bring him up, you seem to suggest that Plato really was right after all:
Who are we protecting at LW? I think everyone here can tell the difference between EY, The Black Belt Bayesian and Kant on most issues, but from time to time I like a little clarification.